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2014-321 Arts - The Arts Center for Spring 2014 Arts Grant Agreement $1,500
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2014-321 Arts - The Arts Center for Spring 2014 Arts Grant Agreement $1,500
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5/16/2017 3:29:40 PM
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7/15/2014 12:44:22 PM
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7/2/2014
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Agreement
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R 2014-321 Arts - The ArtsCenter - Spring 2014 Arts Grant Agreement
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5/23/2014 A powerful post-Civil War encounter in ArtsCenter Stage's The Whipping Man I Theater I IndyWeek <br /> prod'uttiom•proves once again that a tiny stage, nonexistent back-of-house <br /> and minimal staff cannot weaken the transformative power of drama. The <br /> Whipping Man is two hours long, and for many of those .120 minutes, you <br /> will be on the edge of your seat. The script's intricate folds open slowly; <br /> but during the second act, the intermittent popping of secrets becomes a <br /> fusillade leading to cannon-fire of explosive knowledge, which exposes <br /> both characters and audience in the fiery wreckage. <br /> The story takes place over three days in April 1865, less than a week after <br /> Lee's surrender at Appomattox. As the play begins, we see Caleb DeLeon <br /> (Victor Rivera, moving effectively from callow and commanding to <br /> chastened awareness), dragging himself, grievously wounded, into the <br /> remains of his father's once-grand Richmond house (all the production <br /> design work is very strong). Caleb is a.Jew and a Confederate soldier, and <br /> his parents have fled the city, which is now under Federal control. But two <br /> former slaves have remained in the house for their own reasons: Having <br /> been part of the household all their lives, they too are ,Jews. .John is a <br /> young man, about Caleb's age; Simon is of a solid middle age, and the man <br /> without whom the household cannot run. <br /> It is a season of mud and blood, of despair and rejoicing. And it is <br /> Passover. <br /> Incisively directed by Mark Filiaci, with a restraint that makes late <br /> revelations all the more forceful, the three actors obliterate this time in a <br /> modern town and replace it with desperate days in ruined Richmond. This <br /> is not a play where you are forced to always keep in mind that it is a play. It <br /> is not art about art. The actors do not speak directly to the audience. They <br /> speak to us through the power of the dramatic story, and with their <br /> fearless acting. <br /> Led by Phillip B. Smith as Simon, they make us know some essential things <br /> about that past and the way it has shaped our present. Without spelling <br /> them out, playwright Lopez has Simon engage us with a range of moral <br /> quandaries—what is good, what is right, what is necessary, what can be <br /> forgiven, what cannot be allowed to pass without counteraction? Simon <br /> holds the most knowledge of the three men, though he doesn't know <br /> everything he thinks he knows. He chivvies the fecklessJohn (Alphonse <br /> Nicholson, again leaping ahead of himself in nuanced understanding), <br /> who's frittering his freedom liberating whisky, fancy clothes and piles of <br /> books; he saves Caleb's life; he feeds all three of them. And he insists on <br /> holding a Seder at Caleb's bedside, even though Caleb lost his faith in the <br /> trenches of Petersburg. <br /> That Seder scene, with its celebrations and revelations, is one of the most <br /> powerful scenes I've ever witnessed on stage. Do not miss it. <br /> This article appeared in print with the headline "A night different from <br /> other nights." <br /> http://Www.i ndyweekcorrA ndymekla-poveerfukpost-civi I-war-encounter-i n-artscenter-stag es-the-whippi ng-man/Content?oid=3749259&node=print 213 <br />
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